This 11-episode series follows the retired wide receiver as he works with fabrics and furniture and finishes, makes exacting choices about hinges, handles and other details, and negotiates with contractors, carpenters, painters and an ever-shifting backfield of personal assistants and gofers.

As Vince Lombardi would never have said, the proper window treatment isn’t everything. It’s the only thing.

•Daisy Martinez, the longtime host of the PBS series “Daisy Cooks!” makes her move to basic cable with “Viva Daisy” (9:30 a.m., Food).

A Brooklyn native and daughter of Puerto Rican-born parents, Martinez learned to cook from her family and refined her approach at the French Culinary Institute. She’s been a regular contributor to “Every Day with Rachael Ray.”

•Two series air their final episodes tonight.

The whimsical romantic comedy “Eli Stone” (10 p.m., ABC, TV-PG) comes to an end. It combined magical realism and impromptu musical numbers in ways that some found utterly charming and others merely cloying.

It was clearly part of a trend on ABC that included shows like “Cupid” and “Pushing Daisies,” a trend that appears to be over.

Over on CBS, the murder and mayhem come to an end on a two-episode helping of “Harper’s Island” (9 and 10 p.m., TV-14), a cheesy serial about a serial killer set on a resort island during a wedding celebration.

•The notion of a plus-sized good girl getting the best of a vapid mean girl gets a new twist in new supernatural fantasy series “Drop Dead Diva” (9 p.m., Sunday, Lifetime).

In a premise less complicated than it sounds, a thin, shallow model-in-training (Brooke D’Orsay) expires in a collision with a fruit truck and then recoils when her soul inhabits the rather spacious confines of a brilliant, workaholic but hefty attorney (Brooke Elliott).

•“Entourage” (10:30 p.m., Sunday, HBO, TV-MA) returns for a sixth season with changes looming and questions in the air. For starters: will the boys get tired of their frat-house existence before viewers grow tired of them?

Vince (Alan Grenier) appears to be on a comeback with his stint in Martin Scorsese’s “Gatsby,” but it looks like a begrudging lurch toward maturity may be breaking up his gang.

Vince’s manager Eric (Kevin Connolly) mulls the idea of moving out and getting his own place. And even Lloyd (Rex Lee), the doormat assistant to high-powered agent Ari (Jeremy Piven), has decided to stand up for himself.